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The Global Media Giants
We are the world
By Robert McChesney
A specter now haunts the world: a global commercial media system dominated by a small
number of superpowerful, mostly U.S.-based transnational media corporations. It is a system that
works to advance the cause of the global market and promote commercial values, while
denigrating journalism and culture not conducive to the immediate bottom line or long-run
corporate interests. It is a disaster for anything but the most superficial notion of democracy--a
democracy where, to paraphrase John Jay's maxim, those who own the world ought to govern it.
The global commercial system is a very recent development. Until the 1980s, media systems
were generally national in scope. While there have been imports of books, films, music and TV
shows for decades, the basic broadcasting systems and newspaper industries were domestically
owned and regulated. Beginning in the 1980s, pressure from the IMF, World Bank and U.S.
government to deregulate and privatize media and communication systems coincided with new
satellite and digital technologies, resulting in the rise of transnational media giants.
How quickly has the global media system emerged? The two largest media firms in the world,
Time Warner and Disney, generated around 15 percent of their income outside of the United
States in 1990. By 1997, that figure was in the 30 percent-35 percent range. Both firms expect to
do a majority of their business abroad at some point in the next decade.
The global media system is now dominated by a first tier of nine giant firms. The five largest are
Time Warner (1997 sales: $24 billion), Disney ($22 billion), Bertelsmann ($15 billion), Viacom
($13 billion), and Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation ($11 billion). Besides needing global
scope to compete, the rules of thumb for global media giants are twofold: First, get bigger so you
dominate markets and your competition can't buy you out. Firms like Disney and Time Warner
have almost tripled in size this decade.
Second, have interests in numerous media industries, such as film production, book publishing,
music, TV channels and networks, retail stores, amusement parks, magazines, newspapers and
the like. The profit whole for the global media giant can be vastly greater than the sum of the
media parts. A film, for example, should also generate a soundtrack, a book, and merchandise,
and possibly spin-off TV shows, CD-ROMs, video games and amusement park rides. Firms that
do not have conglomerated media holdings simply cannot compete in this market.
The first tier is rounded out by TCI, the largest U.S. cable company that also has U.S. and global
media holdings in scores of ventures too numerous to mention. The other three first-tier global
media firms are all part of much larger industrial corporate powerhouses: General Electric (1997
sales: $80 billion), owner of NBC; Sony (1997 sales: $48 billion), owner of Columbia & TriStar
Pictures and major recording interests; and Seagram (1997 sales: $14 billion), owner of
Universal film and music interests. The media holdings of these last four firms do between $6
billion and $9 billion in business per year. While they are not as diverse as the media holdings of
the first five global media giants, these four firms have global distribution and production in the
areas where they compete. And firms like Sony and GE have the resources to make deals to get a
lot bigger very quickly if they so desire.
Behind these firms is a second tier of some three or four dozen media firms that do between $1
billion and $8 billion per year in media-related business. These firms tend to have national or
regional strongholds or to specialize in global niche markets. About one-half of them come from
North America, including the likes of CBS, the New York Times Co., Hearst, Comcast and
Gannett.Most of the rest come from Europe, with a handful based in East Asia and Latin
America.
In short, the overwhelming majority (in revenue terms) of the world's film production, TV show
production, cable channel ownership, cable and satellite system ownership, book publishing,
magazine publishing and music production is provided by these 50 or so firms, and the first nine
firms thoroughly dominate many of these sectors. By any standard of democracy, such a
concentration of media power is troubling, if not unacceptable.
But that hardly explains how concentrated and uncompetitive this global media power actually
is. In addition, these firms are all actively engaged in equity joint ventures where they share
ownership of concerns with their "competitors" so as to reduce competition and risk. Each of the
nine first-tier media giants, for example, has joint ventures with, on average, two-thirds of the
other eight first-tier media giants. And the second tier is every bit as aggressive about making
joint ventures. (See chart below for the extent of joint ventures between media giants.)
We are the world
In some ways, the emerging global commercial media system is not an entirely negative
proposition. It occasionally promotes anti-racist, anti-sexist or anti-authoritarian messages that
can be welcome in some of the more repressive corners of the world. But on balance the system
has minimal interest in journalism or public affairs except for that which serves the business and
upper-middle classes, and it privileges just a few lucrative genres that it can do quite well--like
sports, light entertainment and action movies--over other fare. Even at its best the entire system
is saturated by a hyper- commercialism, a veritable commercial carpetbombing of every aspect
of human life. As the C.E.O. of Westinghouse put it (Advertising Age, 2/3/97), "We are here to
serve advertisers. That is our raison d'etre."
Some once posited that the rise of the Internet would eliminate the monopoly power of the global
media giants. Such talk has declined recently as the largest media, telecommunication and
computer firms have done everything within their immense powers to colonize the Internet, or at
least neutralize its threat. The global media cartel may be evolving into a global communication
cartel.
But the entire global media and communication system is still influx. While we are probably not
too far from crystallization, there will likely be considerable merger and joint venture activity in
the coming years. Indeed, by the time you read this, there may already be some shifts in who
owns what or whom.
What is tragic is that this entire process of global media concentration has taken place with little
public debate, especially in the U.S., despite the clear implications for politics and culture. After
World War II, the Allies restricted media concentration in occupied Germany and Japan because
they noted that such concentration promoted anti-democratic, even fascist, political cultures. It
may be time for the United States and everyone else to take a dose of that medicine. But for that
to happen will require concerted effort to educate and organize people around media issues. That
is the task before us.
This article and the following corporate profiles are based on The Global Media: The New
Missionaries of Corporate Capitalism (Cassell, 1997), co-authored with Edward S. Herman. The
Global Media can be ordered by calling 1-800-561-7704.
Time Warner
$25 billion - 1997 sales
Time Warner, the largest media corporation in the world, was formed in 1989 through the
merger of Time Inc. and Warner Communications. In 1992, Time Warner split off its
entertainment group, and sold 25 percent of it to U.S. West, and 5.6 percent of it to each of the
Japanese conglomerates Itochu and Toshiba. It regained from Disney its position as the world's
largest media firm with the 1996 acquisition of Turner Broadcasting.
Time Warner is moving toward being a fully global company, with over 200 subsidiaries
worldwide. In 1996, approximately two-thirds of Time Warner's income came from the United
States, but that figure is expected to drop to three-fifths by 2000 and eventually to less than one-
half. Time Warner expects globalization to provide growth tonic; it projects that its annual sales
growth rate of 14 percent in the middle 1990s will climb to over 20 percent by the end of the
decade.
Music accounts for just over 20 percent of Time Warner's business, as does the news division of
magazine and book publishing and cable television news. Time Warner's U.S. cable systems
account for over 10 percent of income. The remainder is accounted for largely by Time Warner's
extensive entertainment film, video and television holdings. Time Warner is a major force in
virtually every medium and on every continent.
Time Warner has zeroed in on global television as the most lucrative area for growth. Unlike
News Corporation, however, Time Warner has devoted itself to producing programming and
channels rather than developing entire satellite systems. Time Warner is also one of the largest
movie theater owners in the world, with approximately 1,000 screens outside of the United States
and further expansion projected.
The Time Warner strategy is to merge the former Turner global channels--CNN and
TNT/Cartoon Channel--with their HBO International and recently launched Warner channels to
make a four-pronged assault on the global market. HBO International has already established
itself as the leading subscription TV channel in the world; it has a family of pay channels and is
available in over 35 countries. HBO President Jeffrey Bewkes states that global expansion is
HBO's "manifest destiny."
CNN International, a subsidiary of CNN, is also established as the premier global television
news channel, beamed via ten satellites to over 200 nations and 90 million subscribers by 1994, a
27 percent increase over 1993. The long-term goal for CNN International is to operate (or
participate in joint ventures to establish) CNN channels in French, Japanese, Hindi, Arabic and
perhaps one or two other regional languages. CNN launched a Spanish-language service for
Latin America in 1997, based in Atlanta. CNN International will also draw on the Time Warner
journalism resources as it faces new challenges from news channels launched by News
Corporation and NBC-Microsoft.
Before their 1996 merger, Turner and Time Warner were both global television powers with the
TNT/Cartoon Network and Warner channels, drawing upon their respective large libraries of
cartoons and motion pictures. Now these channels will be redeployed to better utilize each
other's resources, with plans being drawn up to develop several more global cable channels to
take advantage of the world's largest film, television and cartoon libraries.
Time Warner selected holdings
ī‚ˇ Majority interest in WB, a U.S. television network launched in 1995 to provide a distribution
platform for Time Warner films and programs. It is carried on the Tribune Company's 16 U.S.
television stations, which reach 25 percent of U.S. TV households;
ī‚ˇ Significant interests in non-U.S. broadcasting joint ventures;
ī‚ˇ The largest cable system in the United States, controlling 22 of the largest 100 markets;
ī‚ˇ Several U.S. and global cable television channels, including CNN, Headline News, CNNfn,
TBS, TNT, Turner Classic Movies, The Cartoon Network and CNN-SI (a cross-production
with Sports Illustrated);
ī‚ˇ Partial ownership of the cable channel Comedy Central and a controlling stake in Court TV;
ī‚ˇ HBO and Cinemax pay cable channels;
ī‚ˇ Minority stake in PrimeStar, U.S. satellite television service;
ī‚ˇ Warner Brothers and New Line Cinema film studios;
ī‚ˇ More than 1,000 movie screens outside of the United States;
ī‚ˇ A library of over 6,000 films, 25,000 television programs, books, music and thousands of
cartoons;
ī‚ˇ Twenty-four magazines, including Time, People and Sports Illustrated;
ī‚ˇ Fifty percent of DC Comics, publisher of Superman, Batman and 60 other titles;
ī‚ˇ The second largest book-publishing business in the world, including Time-Life Books (42
percent of sales outside of the United States) and the Book-of-the-Month Club;
ī‚ˇ Warner Music Group, one of the largest global music businesses with nearly 60 percent of
revenues from outside the United States;
ī‚ˇ Six Flags theme park chain; The Atlanta Hawks and Atlanta Braves professional sports teams;
Retail stores, including over 150 Warner Bros. stores and Turner Retail Group; Minority
interests in toy companies Atari and Hasbro.
Disney
$24 billion - 1997 sales
Disney is the closest challenger to Time Warner for the status of world's largest media firm. In
the early 1990s, Disney successfully shifted its emphasis from its theme parks and resorts to its
film and television divisions. In 1995, Disney made the move from being a dominant global
content producer to being a fully integrated media giant with the purchase of Capital Cities/ABC
for $19 billion, one of the biggest acquisitions in business history.
Disney now generates 31 percent of its income from broadcasting, 23 percent from theme parks,
and the balance from "creative content," meaning films, publishing and merchandising. The ABC
deal provided Disney, already regarded as the industry leader at using cross-selling and cross-
promotion to maximize revenues, with a U.S. broadcasting network and widespread global
media holdings to incorporate into its activities.
Consequently, according to Advertising Age (8/7/95), Disney "is uniquely positioned to fulfill
virtually any marketing option, on any scale, almost anywhere in the world." It has already
included the new Capital Cities/ABC brands in its exclusive global marketing deals with
McDonald's and Mattel toymakers. Although Disney has traditionally preferred to operate on its
own, C.E.O. Michael Eisner has announced Disney's plans to expand aggressively overseas
through joint ventures with local firms or other global players, or through further acquisitions.
Disney's stated goal is to expand its non-U.S. share of revenues from 23 percent in 1995 to 50
percent by 2000.
Historically, Disney has been strong in entertainment and animation, two areas that do well in
the global market. In 1996 Disney reorganized, putting all its global television activities into a
single division, Disney/ABC International Television. Its first order of business is to expand the
children- and family-oriented Disney Channel into a global force, capitalizing upon the
enormous Disney resources. Disney is also developing an advertising-supported children's
channel to complement the subscription Disney Channel.
For the most part, Disney's success has been restricted to English-language channels in North
America, Britain and Australia. Disney's absence has permitted the children's channels of News
Corporation, Time Warner and especially Viacom to dominate the lucrative global market.
Disney launched a Chinese-language Disney Channel based in Taiwan in 1995, and plans to
launch Disney Channels in France, Italy, Germany and the Middle East. "The Disney Channel
should be the killer children's service throughout the world," Disney's executive in charge of
international television states.
With the purchase of ABC's ESPN, the television sports network, Disney has possession of the
unquestioned global leader. ESPN has three U.S. cable channels, a radio network with 420
affiliates, and the ESPN Sports-Zone website, one of the most heavily used locales on the
Internet. One Disney executive notes that with ESPN and the family-oriented Disney Channel,
Disney has "two horses to ride in foreign markets, not just one."
ESPN International dominates televised sport, broadcasting on a 24-hour basis in 21 languages
to over 165 countries. It reaches the one desirable audience that had eluded Disney in the past:
young, single, middle-class men. "Our plan is to think globally but to customize locally," states
the senior VP of ESPN International. In Latin America the emphasis is on soccer, in Asia it is
table tennis, and in India ESPN provided over 1,000 hours of cricket in 1995.
Disney plans to exploit the "synergies" of ESPN much as it has exploited its cartoon characters.
"We know that when we lay Mickey Mouse or Goofy on top of products, we get pretty creative
stuff," Eisner states. "ESPN has the potential to be that kind of brand." Disney plans call for a
chain of ESPN theme sports bars, ESPN product merchandising, and possibly a chain of ESPN
entertainment centers based on the Club ESPN at Walt Disney World. ESPN has released five
music CDs, two of which have sold over 500,000 copies. In late 1996, Disney began negotiations
with Hearst and Petersen Publishing to produce ESPNSports Weekly magazine, to be a
"branded competitor to Sports Illustrated."
Disney selected holdings
ī‚ˇ The U.S. ABC television and radio networks;
ī‚ˇ Ten U.S. television stations and 21 U.S. radio stations;
ī‚ˇ U.S. and global cable television channels Disney Channel, ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNews;
holdings in Lifetime, A & E and History channels;
ī‚ˇ Americast, interactive TV joint venture with several telephone companies;
ī‚ˇ Several major film, video and television production studios including Disney, Miramax and
Buena Vista;
ī‚ˇ Magazine and newspaper publishing, through its subsidiaries, Fairchild Publications and
Chilton Publications;
ī‚ˇ Book publishing, including Hyperion Books and Chilton Publications;
ī‚ˇ Several music labels, including Hollywood Records, Mammoth Records and Walt Disney
Records;
ī‚ˇ Theme parks and resorts, including Disneyland, Disney World and stakes in major theme
parks in France and Japan;
ī‚ˇ Disney Cruise Line;
ī‚ˇ DisneyQuest, a chain of high-tech arcade game stores;
ī‚ˇ Controlling interests in the NHL Anaheim Mighty Ducks and major league baseball's
Anaheim Angels;
ī‚ˇ Consumer products, including more than 550 Disney retail stores worldwide.
Bertelsmann
$15 billion - 1996 sales
Bertelsmann is the one European firm in the first tier of media
giants. The Bertelsmann empire was built on global networks of book and
music clubs. Music and television provide 31 percent of its income, book
publishing 33 percent, magazines and newspapers 20 percent, and a global
printing business accounts for the remainder. In 1994 its income was
distributed among Germany (36 percent), the rest of Europe (32 percent),
the United States (24 percent) and the rest of the world (8 percent).
Bertelsmann's stated goal is to evolve "from a media enterprise with
international activities into a truly global communications group."
Bertelsmann's strengths in global expansion are its global distribution
network for music, its global book and music clubs, and its facility
with languages other than English. It is working to strengthen its music
holdings to become the world leader, through a possible buyout of--or
merger with--EMI and through establishing joint ventures with local
music companies in emerging markets. Bertelsmann is considered to be the
best contender of all the media giants to exploit the Eastern European
markets.
Bertelsmann has two severe competitive disadvantages in the global
media sweepstakes. It has no significant film or television production
studios or film library, and it has minimal involvement in global
television, where much of the growth is taking place. The company began
to address this problem in 1996 by merging its television interests
(Ufa) into a joint venture with Compagnie Luxembourgeoise de
Telediffusion (CLT), the Luxembourg-based European commercial
broadcasting power. According to a Bertelsmann executive, the CLT deal
was "a strategic step to become a major media player, especially in
light of the recent European and American mergers."
Bertelsmann selected holdings
ī‚ˇ German television channels RTL, RTL2, SuperRTL
and Vox;
ī‚ˇ Part ownership of Premiere, Germany's largest pay-TV channel;
ī‚ˇ Stakes in British, French and Dutch TV channels;
ī‚ˇ 50 percent stake in CLT-Ufa, which owns 19 European TV channels and
23 European radio stations;
ī‚ˇ Eighteen European radio stations;
ī‚ˇ Newspaper and magazine publishing, including more than 100
magazines;
ī‚ˇ Book publishing, with some 40 publishing houses, concentrating on
German-, French- and English-language (Bantam and Doubleday Dell)
titles;
ī‚ˇ Major recording studios Arista and RCA;
ī‚ˇ Leading book and record clubs in the world.
Viacom
$13 billion - 1997 sales
C.E.O. Sumner Redstone, who controls 39 percent of Viacom's
stock, orchestrated the deals that led to the acquisitions of Paramount
and Blockbuster in 1994, thereby promoting the firm from $2 billion in
1993 sales to the front ranks. Viacom generates 33 percent of its income
from its film studios, 33 percent from its music, video rentals and
theme parks, 18 percent from broadcasting, and 14 percent from
publishing. Redstone's strategy is for Viacom to become the world's
"premier software driven growth company."
Viacom's growth strategy is twofold. First, it is implementing an
aggressive policy of using company-wide cross-promotions to improve
sales. It proved invaluable that MTV constantly plugged the film
Clueless in 1995, and the same strategy will be applied to the
Paramount television program based on the movie. Simon & Schuster is
establishing a Nickelodeon book imprint and a "Beavis and Butthead" book
series based on the MTV characters. Viacom also has plans to
establish a comic-book imprint based upon Paramount characters, it is
considering creating a record label to exploit its MTV brand name
and it has plans to open a chain of retail stores to capitalize upon its
"brands" ^ la Disney and Time Warner. In 1997 Paramount will begin
producing three Nickelodeon and three MTV movies annually. "We're just
now beginning to realize the benefits of the Paramount and Blockbuster
mergers," Redstone stated in 1996.
Second, Viacom has targeted global growth, with a stated goal of
earning 40 percent of its revenues outside of the United States by 2000.
As one Wall Street analyst puts it, Redstone wants Viacom "playing in
the same international league" with News Corporation and Time Warner.
Since 1992 Viacom has invested between $750 million and $1 billion in
international expansion. "We're not taking our foot off the
accelerator," one Viacom executive states.
Viacom's two main weapons are Nickelodeon and MTV.
Nickelodeon has been a global powerhouse, expanding to every
continent but Antarctica in 1996 and 1997 and offering programming in
several languages. It is already a world leader in children's
television, reaching 90 million TV households in 70 countries other than
the United States--where it can be seen in 68 million households and
completely dominates children's television.
MTV is the preeminent global music television channel,
available in 250 million homes worldwide and in scores of nations. In
1996 Viacom announced further plans to "significantly expand" its global
operations. MTV has used new digital technologies to make it
possible to customize programming inexpensively for different regions
and nations around the world.
Viacom selected holdings
ī‚ˇ Thirteen U.S. television stations;
ī‚ˇ A 50 percent interest in the U.S. UPN television network with
Chris-Craft Industries;
ī‚ˇ U.S. and global cable television networks, including MTV,
M2, VH1, Nickelodeon, Showtime,
TVLand and Paramount Networks;
ī‚ˇ A 50 percent interest in Comedy Central channel (with Time
Warner);
ī‚ˇ Film, video and television production, including Paramount Pictures;
ī‚ˇ 50 percent stake in United Cinemas International, one of the world's
three largest theater companies;
ī‚ˇ Blockbuster Video and Music stores, the world's largest video rental
stores;
ī‚ˇ Book publishing, including Simon & Schuster, Scribners and
Macmillan;
ī‚ˇ Five theme parks.
News Corporation
$10 billion - 1996 sales
The News Corporation is often identified with its head, Rupert
Murdoch, whose family controls some 30 percent of its stock. Murdoch's
goal is for News Corporation to own multiple forms of programming--news,
sports, films and children's shows--and beam them via satellite or TV
stations to homes in the United States, Europe, Asia and South America.
Viacom CEO Sumner Redstone says of Murdoch that "he basically wants to
conquer the world."
And he seems to be doing it. Redstone, Disney CEO Michael Eisner, and
Time Warner CEO Gerald Levin have each commented that Murdoch is the one
media executive they most respect and fear, and the one whose moves they
study. TCI's John Malone states that global media vertical integration
is all about trying to catch Rupert. Time Warner executive Ted Turner
views Murdoch in a more sinister fashion, having likened him to Adolf
Hitler.
After establishing News Corporation in his native Australia, Murdoch
entered the British market in the 1960s and by the 1980s had become a
dominant force in the U.S. market. News Corporation went heavily into
debt to subsidize its purchase of Twentieth Century Fox and the
formation of the Fox television network in the 1980s; by the
mid-1990s News Corporation had eliminated much of that debt.
News Corporation operates in nine different media on six continents.
Its 1995 revenues were distributed relatively evenly among filmed
entertainment (26 percent), newspapers (24 percent), television (21
percent), magazines (14 percent) and book publishing (12 percent). News
Corporation has been masterful in utilizing its various properties for
cross-promotional purposes, and at using its media power to curry
influence with public officials worldwide. "Murdoch seems to have
Washington in his back pocket," observed one industry analyst after News
Corporation received another favorable ruling (New York Times,
7/26/96). The only media sector in which News Corporation lacks a major
presence is music, but it has a half-interest in the Channel V
music television channel in Asia.
Although News Corporation earned 70 percent of its 1995 income in the
United States, its plan for global expansion looks to continental
Europe, Asia and Latin America, areas where growth is expected to be
greatest for commercial media. Until around 2005, Murdoch expects the
surest profits in the developed world, especially Europe and Japan. News
Corporation is putting most of its eggs in the basket of television,
specifically digital satellite television. It plans to draw on its
experience in establishing the most profitable satellite television
system in the world, the booming British Sky Broadcasting
(BSkyB). News Corporation can also use its U.S. Fox
television network to provide programming for its nascent satellite
ventures. News Corporation is spending billions of dollars to establish
these systems around the world; although the risk is considerable, if
only a few of them establish monopoly or duopoly positions the entire
project should prove lucrative.
News Corporation selected holdings
ī‚ˇ The U.S. Fox broadcasting network;
ī‚ˇ Twenty-two U.S. television stations, the largest U.S. station group,
covering over 40 percent of U.S. TV households;
ī‚ˇ Fox News Channel;
ī‚ˇ A 50 percent stake (with TCI's Liberty Media) in several U.S. and
global cable networks, including fx, fxM and Fox Sports
Net;
ī‚ˇ 50 percent stake in Fox Kids Worldwide, production studio and owner
of U.S. cable Family Channel;
ī‚ˇ Ownership or major interests in satellite services reaching Europe,
U.S., Asia, and Latin America, often under the Sky Broadcasting brand;
ī‚ˇ Twentieth Century Fox, a major film, television and video production
center, which has a library of over 2,000 films to exploit;
ī‚ˇ Some 132 newspapers (primarily in Australia, Britain and the United
States, including the London Times and the New York Post),
making it one of the three largest newspaper groups in the world;
ī‚ˇ Twenty-five magazines, most notably TV Guide;
ī‚ˇ Book publishing interests, including HarperCollins;
ī‚ˇ Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team.
Sony
$9 billion - 1997 sales (media only)
Sony's media holdings are concentrated in music (the former CBS
records) and film and television production (the former Columbia
Pictures), each of which it purchased in 1989. Music accounts for about
60 percent of Sony's media income and film and television production
account for the rest. Sony is a dominant entertainment producer, and its
media sales are expected to surpass $9 billion in 1997. It also has
major holdings in movie theaters in joint venture with Seagram. As
Sony's media activities seem divorced from its other extensive
activities--Sony expects $50 billion in company-wide sales in
1997--there is ongoing speculation that it will sell its valuable
production studios to vertically integrated chains that can better
exploit them.
Sony was foiled in its initial attempts to find synergies between
hardware and software, but it anticipates that digital communication
will provide the basis for new synergies. Sony hopes to capitalize upon
its vast copyrighted library of films, music and TV programs to leap to
the front of the digital video disc market, where it is poised to be one
of the two global leaders with Matsushita. Sony also enjoys a 25 percent
share of the multi-billion-dollar video games industry; with the shift
to digital formats these games can now be converted into channels in
digital television systems.
TCI
$7 billion - 1996 sales
TCI (Tele-Communications Inc.) is smaller than the other firms in
the first tier, but its unique position in the media industry has made
it a central player in the global media system. TCI's foundation is its
dominant position as the second biggest U.S. cable television system
provider. C.E.O. John Malone, who has effective controlling interest
over TCI, has been able to use the steady cash influx from the lucrative
semi-monopolistic cable business to build an empire.
Malone understands the importance of the U.S. cable base to bankroll
TCI's expansion; in 1995 and 1996 he bought several smaller cable
systems to consolidate TCI's hold on the U.S. cable market. TCI faces a
direct and potentially very damaging challenge to its U.S. market share
from digital satellite broadcasting. It is responding by converting its
cable systems to digital format so as to increase channel capacity to
200. TCI is also using its satellite spin-off to position itself in the
rival satellite business and retain some of the 15 to 20 million
Americans expected to switch from cable broadcasting to satellite
broadcasting by 2000. In addition to owning two satellites valued at
$600 million, TCI holds a 21 percent stake in Primestar, a U.S.
satellite television joint venture with the other leading U.S. cable
companies, News Corporation and General Electric, which already had 1.2
million subscribers in l996.
TCI has used its control of cable systems to acquire equity stakes in
many of the cable channels that need to be carried over TCI to be
viable. TCI has significant interests in Discovery, QVC,
Fox Sports Net, Court TV, E!, Home Shopping
Network and Black Entertainment TV, among others. In 1996,
TCI negotiated the right to purchase a 20 percent stake in News
Corporation's new Fox News Channel in return for access to TCI
systems. Through its subsidiary Liberty Media, TCI has interests in 91
U.S. program services.
Nor does TCI restrict its investments to cable channels and content
producers. It has a 10 percent stake in Time Warner as well as a 20
percent stake in Silver King Communications, where former Fox
network builder Barry Diller is putting together another U.S. television
network.
TCI has applied its expansionist strategy to the global as well as
domestic media market. On the one hand, TCI develops its core cable
business and has become the global leader in cable systems, with strong
units in Britain, Japan and Chile. Merrill Lynch estimates that TCI
International's cable base outside of the United States will increase
from 3 million subscribers in 1995 to 10 million in 1999.
On the other hand, TCI uses its cable resources to invest across all
global media and to engage in numerous non-cable joint ventures. "When
you are the largest cable operator in the world," a TCI executive
states, "people find a way to do business with you." It already has 30
media deals outside of the United States, including a venture with Sega
Enterprises to launch computer game channels, a joint venture with News
Corporation for a global sports channel, and a 10 percent stake in Sky
Latin America.
Universal (Seagram)
$7 billion - 1997 sales
Effectively controlled by the Bronfman family, the global
beverage firm Seagram purchased Universal (then MCA) from Matsushita for
$5.7 billion in 1995. Matsushita was unable to make a success of MCA and
had refused to go along with MCA executives who had wanted to acquire
CBS in the early l990s. Universal is expected to account for
approximately half of Seagram's $14 billion in sales in 1997.
Over half of Universal's income is generated by the Universal
Studios' production of films and television programs. Universal is also
a major music producer and book publisher and operates several theme
parks. As many of the broadcast networks and cable channels vertically
integrate with production companies, Universal has fewer options for
sales and is less secure in its future. It owns the cable USA
Network and the Sci-Fi Network, after buying out its uneasy
partner Viacom.
NBC (GE)
$5 billion - 1996 sales
General Electric is one of the leading electronics and
manufacturing firms in the world with nearly $80 billion in sales in
1996. Its operations have become increasingly global, with non-U.S.
revenues increasing from 20 percent of the total in 1985 to 38 percent
in 1995, and an expected 50 percent in 2000. Although NBC currently
constitutes only a small portion of GE's total activity, after years of
rapid growth it is considered to be the core of GE's strategy for
long-term global growth.
NBC owns U.S. television and radio networks and 11 television
stations. It has been aggressive in expanding into cable, where it now
owns several cable channels outright, like CNBC, as well as
shares in some 20 other channels, including the A&E network.
The most dramatic expression of GE's media-centered strategy is its 1996
alliance and joint investment with Microsoft to produce the cable news
channel MSNBC, along with a complementary on-line service. From
this initial $500 million investment, NBC and Microsoft plan to expand
MSNBC quickly into a global news channel, followed perhaps by a
global entertainment and sports channel. NBC and Microsoft are also
developing a series of TV channels in Europe aimed at computer users.
The Second Tier
Below the global giants in the media food chain is a second tier of corporations that fill regional
or niche markets. Some of these firms are as large as the smaller global companies, but lack their
world-wide reach. A few second-tier companies may attempt, through aggressive mergers and
acquisitions of like-sized firms, to become full-blown first-tier global media giants; others will
likely be swallowed by larger companies amassing ever greater empires.
U.S.
ī‚ˇ Westinghouse $5 billion
ī‚ˇ Advance Publications $4.9 billion
ī‚ˇ Gannett $4.0 billion
ī‚ˇ Cox Enterprises $3.8 billion
ī‚ˇ Times-Mirror $3.5 billion
ī‚ˇ Comcast $3.4 billion
ī‚ˇ McGraw Hill $3 billion
ī‚ˇ Reader's Digest $3 billion
ī‚ˇ Knight-Ridder $2.9 billion
ī‚ˇ Dow Jones $2.5 billion
ī‚ˇ New York Times Co. $2.5 billion
ī‚ˇ Tribune Co. $2.2 billion
ī‚ˇ Hearst $2 billion
ī‚ˇ Washington Post Co. $1.8 billion
ī‚ˇ Cablevision $1.1 billion
ī‚ˇ DirecTV (Owned by General Motors)
ī‚ˇ DreamWorks
Canada
ī‚ˇ Thomson $7.3 billion
ī‚ˇ Rogers Communications $2 billion
ī‚ˇ Hollinger
Latin America
ī‚ˇ Cisneros Group (Venezuela) $3.2 billion
ī‚ˇ Globo (Brazil) $2.2 billion
ī‚ˇ Clarin (Argentina) $1.2 billion
ī‚ˇ Televisa (Mexico) $1.2 billion
Europe
ī‚ˇ Havas (France) $8.8 billion
ī‚ˇ Reed Elsevier (Britain/Netherlands) $5.5 billion
ī‚ˇ EMI (Britain) $5.4 billion
ī‚ˇ Hachette (France) $5.3 billion
ī‚ˇ Reuters (Britain) $4.1 billion
ī‚ˇ Kirch Group (Germany) $4 billion
ī‚ˇ Granada Group (Britain) $3.6 billion
ī‚ˇ BBC (Britain) $3.5 billion
ī‚ˇ Axel Springer (Germany) $3 billion
ī‚ˇ Canal Plus (France) $3 billion
ī‚ˇ CLT (Luxembourg) $3 billion
ī‚ˇ Pearson PLC (Britain) $2.9 billion
ī‚ˇ United News & Media (Britain) $2.9 billion
ī‚ˇ Carlton Communications (Britain) $2.5 billion
ī‚ˇ Mediaset (Italy) $2 billion
ī‚ˇ Kinnevik (Sweden) $1.8 billion
ī‚ˇ Television Francais 1 (France) $1.8 billion
ī‚ˇ Verlagsgruppe Bauer (Germany) $1.7 billion
ī‚ˇ Wolters Kluwer (Netherlands) $1.7 billion
ī‚ˇ RCS Editori Spa (Italy) $1.6 billion
ī‚ˇ VNU (Netherlands) $1.4 billion
ī‚ˇ Prisa Group (Spain)
ī‚ˇ Antena 3 (Spain)
ī‚ˇ CEP Communications (France)
Asia/Pacific
ī‚ˇ NHK (Japan) $5.6 billion
ī‚ˇ Fuji Television (Japan) $2.6 billion
ī‚ˇ Nippon Television Network (Japan) $2.2 billion
ī‚ˇ Cheil Jedang (Korea) $2.1 billion
ī‚ˇ Tokyo Broadcasting System (Japan) $2.1 billion
ī‚ˇ Modi (India) $2 billion
ī‚ˇ Asahi National Broadcasting Co. (Japan) $1.6 billion
ī‚ˇ Toho Company (Japan) $1.6 billion
ī‚ˇ PBL (Australia) $750 million
ī‚ˇ TVB International (China)
ī‚ˇ Chinese Entertainment Television (China)
ī‚ˇ Asia Broadcasting and Communica-tions Network (Thailand)
ī‚ˇ ABS-CBN (Philippines)
ī‚ˇ Doordarshan (India)
ī‚ˇ Chinese Central Television (China)
*Most sales figures are for 1996, but some are as early as 1993.
See FAIR's Archives for more on:
New York Times
Murdoch/Wall Street Journal
Washington Post
Gannett/USA Today
AT&T/John Malone
Knight-Ridder
Internet Media
Tribune Company
CBS
Time Warner
GE
Disney
Murdoch
Corporate Ownership

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Global Media Giants Dominated by Few U.S. Firms

  • 1. The Global Media Giants We are the world By Robert McChesney A specter now haunts the world: a global commercial media system dominated by a small number of superpowerful, mostly U.S.-based transnational media corporations. It is a system that works to advance the cause of the global market and promote commercial values, while denigrating journalism and culture not conducive to the immediate bottom line or long-run corporate interests. It is a disaster for anything but the most superficial notion of democracy--a democracy where, to paraphrase John Jay's maxim, those who own the world ought to govern it. The global commercial system is a very recent development. Until the 1980s, media systems were generally national in scope. While there have been imports of books, films, music and TV shows for decades, the basic broadcasting systems and newspaper industries were domestically owned and regulated. Beginning in the 1980s, pressure from the IMF, World Bank and U.S. government to deregulate and privatize media and communication systems coincided with new satellite and digital technologies, resulting in the rise of transnational media giants. How quickly has the global media system emerged? The two largest media firms in the world, Time Warner and Disney, generated around 15 percent of their income outside of the United States in 1990. By 1997, that figure was in the 30 percent-35 percent range. Both firms expect to do a majority of their business abroad at some point in the next decade. The global media system is now dominated by a first tier of nine giant firms. The five largest are Time Warner (1997 sales: $24 billion), Disney ($22 billion), Bertelsmann ($15 billion), Viacom ($13 billion), and Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation ($11 billion). Besides needing global scope to compete, the rules of thumb for global media giants are twofold: First, get bigger so you dominate markets and your competition can't buy you out. Firms like Disney and Time Warner have almost tripled in size this decade. Second, have interests in numerous media industries, such as film production, book publishing, music, TV channels and networks, retail stores, amusement parks, magazines, newspapers and the like. The profit whole for the global media giant can be vastly greater than the sum of the media parts. A film, for example, should also generate a soundtrack, a book, and merchandise, and possibly spin-off TV shows, CD-ROMs, video games and amusement park rides. Firms that do not have conglomerated media holdings simply cannot compete in this market. The first tier is rounded out by TCI, the largest U.S. cable company that also has U.S. and global media holdings in scores of ventures too numerous to mention. The other three first-tier global media firms are all part of much larger industrial corporate powerhouses: General Electric (1997 sales: $80 billion), owner of NBC; Sony (1997 sales: $48 billion), owner of Columbia & TriStar Pictures and major recording interests; and Seagram (1997 sales: $14 billion), owner of Universal film and music interests. The media holdings of these last four firms do between $6 billion and $9 billion in business per year. While they are not as diverse as the media holdings of the first five global media giants, these four firms have global distribution and production in the areas where they compete. And firms like Sony and GE have the resources to make deals to get a
  • 2. lot bigger very quickly if they so desire. Behind these firms is a second tier of some three or four dozen media firms that do between $1 billion and $8 billion per year in media-related business. These firms tend to have national or regional strongholds or to specialize in global niche markets. About one-half of them come from North America, including the likes of CBS, the New York Times Co., Hearst, Comcast and Gannett.Most of the rest come from Europe, with a handful based in East Asia and Latin America. In short, the overwhelming majority (in revenue terms) of the world's film production, TV show production, cable channel ownership, cable and satellite system ownership, book publishing, magazine publishing and music production is provided by these 50 or so firms, and the first nine firms thoroughly dominate many of these sectors. By any standard of democracy, such a concentration of media power is troubling, if not unacceptable. But that hardly explains how concentrated and uncompetitive this global media power actually is. In addition, these firms are all actively engaged in equity joint ventures where they share ownership of concerns with their "competitors" so as to reduce competition and risk. Each of the nine first-tier media giants, for example, has joint ventures with, on average, two-thirds of the other eight first-tier media giants. And the second tier is every bit as aggressive about making joint ventures. (See chart below for the extent of joint ventures between media giants.) We are the world In some ways, the emerging global commercial media system is not an entirely negative proposition. It occasionally promotes anti-racist, anti-sexist or anti-authoritarian messages that can be welcome in some of the more repressive corners of the world. But on balance the system has minimal interest in journalism or public affairs except for that which serves the business and upper-middle classes, and it privileges just a few lucrative genres that it can do quite well--like sports, light entertainment and action movies--over other fare. Even at its best the entire system is saturated by a hyper- commercialism, a veritable commercial carpetbombing of every aspect of human life. As the C.E.O. of Westinghouse put it (Advertising Age, 2/3/97), "We are here to serve advertisers. That is our raison d'etre." Some once posited that the rise of the Internet would eliminate the monopoly power of the global media giants. Such talk has declined recently as the largest media, telecommunication and computer firms have done everything within their immense powers to colonize the Internet, or at least neutralize its threat. The global media cartel may be evolving into a global communication cartel. But the entire global media and communication system is still influx. While we are probably not too far from crystallization, there will likely be considerable merger and joint venture activity in the coming years. Indeed, by the time you read this, there may already be some shifts in who owns what or whom. What is tragic is that this entire process of global media concentration has taken place with little
  • 3. public debate, especially in the U.S., despite the clear implications for politics and culture. After World War II, the Allies restricted media concentration in occupied Germany and Japan because they noted that such concentration promoted anti-democratic, even fascist, political cultures. It may be time for the United States and everyone else to take a dose of that medicine. But for that to happen will require concerted effort to educate and organize people around media issues. That is the task before us. This article and the following corporate profiles are based on The Global Media: The New Missionaries of Corporate Capitalism (Cassell, 1997), co-authored with Edward S. Herman. The Global Media can be ordered by calling 1-800-561-7704. Time Warner $25 billion - 1997 sales Time Warner, the largest media corporation in the world, was formed in 1989 through the merger of Time Inc. and Warner Communications. In 1992, Time Warner split off its entertainment group, and sold 25 percent of it to U.S. West, and 5.6 percent of it to each of the Japanese conglomerates Itochu and Toshiba. It regained from Disney its position as the world's largest media firm with the 1996 acquisition of Turner Broadcasting. Time Warner is moving toward being a fully global company, with over 200 subsidiaries worldwide. In 1996, approximately two-thirds of Time Warner's income came from the United States, but that figure is expected to drop to three-fifths by 2000 and eventually to less than one- half. Time Warner expects globalization to provide growth tonic; it projects that its annual sales growth rate of 14 percent in the middle 1990s will climb to over 20 percent by the end of the decade. Music accounts for just over 20 percent of Time Warner's business, as does the news division of magazine and book publishing and cable television news. Time Warner's U.S. cable systems account for over 10 percent of income. The remainder is accounted for largely by Time Warner's extensive entertainment film, video and television holdings. Time Warner is a major force in virtually every medium and on every continent. Time Warner has zeroed in on global television as the most lucrative area for growth. Unlike News Corporation, however, Time Warner has devoted itself to producing programming and channels rather than developing entire satellite systems. Time Warner is also one of the largest movie theater owners in the world, with approximately 1,000 screens outside of the United States and further expansion projected. The Time Warner strategy is to merge the former Turner global channels--CNN and TNT/Cartoon Channel--with their HBO International and recently launched Warner channels to make a four-pronged assault on the global market. HBO International has already established
  • 4. itself as the leading subscription TV channel in the world; it has a family of pay channels and is available in over 35 countries. HBO President Jeffrey Bewkes states that global expansion is HBO's "manifest destiny." CNN International, a subsidiary of CNN, is also established as the premier global television news channel, beamed via ten satellites to over 200 nations and 90 million subscribers by 1994, a 27 percent increase over 1993. The long-term goal for CNN International is to operate (or participate in joint ventures to establish) CNN channels in French, Japanese, Hindi, Arabic and perhaps one or two other regional languages. CNN launched a Spanish-language service for Latin America in 1997, based in Atlanta. CNN International will also draw on the Time Warner journalism resources as it faces new challenges from news channels launched by News Corporation and NBC-Microsoft. Before their 1996 merger, Turner and Time Warner were both global television powers with the TNT/Cartoon Network and Warner channels, drawing upon their respective large libraries of cartoons and motion pictures. Now these channels will be redeployed to better utilize each other's resources, with plans being drawn up to develop several more global cable channels to take advantage of the world's largest film, television and cartoon libraries. Time Warner selected holdings ī‚ˇ Majority interest in WB, a U.S. television network launched in 1995 to provide a distribution platform for Time Warner films and programs. It is carried on the Tribune Company's 16 U.S. television stations, which reach 25 percent of U.S. TV households; ī‚ˇ Significant interests in non-U.S. broadcasting joint ventures; ī‚ˇ The largest cable system in the United States, controlling 22 of the largest 100 markets; ī‚ˇ Several U.S. and global cable television channels, including CNN, Headline News, CNNfn, TBS, TNT, Turner Classic Movies, The Cartoon Network and CNN-SI (a cross-production with Sports Illustrated); ī‚ˇ Partial ownership of the cable channel Comedy Central and a controlling stake in Court TV; ī‚ˇ HBO and Cinemax pay cable channels; ī‚ˇ Minority stake in PrimeStar, U.S. satellite television service; ī‚ˇ Warner Brothers and New Line Cinema film studios; ī‚ˇ More than 1,000 movie screens outside of the United States; ī‚ˇ A library of over 6,000 films, 25,000 television programs, books, music and thousands of cartoons; ī‚ˇ Twenty-four magazines, including Time, People and Sports Illustrated;
  • 5. ī‚ˇ Fifty percent of DC Comics, publisher of Superman, Batman and 60 other titles; ī‚ˇ The second largest book-publishing business in the world, including Time-Life Books (42 percent of sales outside of the United States) and the Book-of-the-Month Club; ī‚ˇ Warner Music Group, one of the largest global music businesses with nearly 60 percent of revenues from outside the United States; ī‚ˇ Six Flags theme park chain; The Atlanta Hawks and Atlanta Braves professional sports teams; Retail stores, including over 150 Warner Bros. stores and Turner Retail Group; Minority interests in toy companies Atari and Hasbro. Disney $24 billion - 1997 sales Disney is the closest challenger to Time Warner for the status of world's largest media firm. In the early 1990s, Disney successfully shifted its emphasis from its theme parks and resorts to its film and television divisions. In 1995, Disney made the move from being a dominant global content producer to being a fully integrated media giant with the purchase of Capital Cities/ABC for $19 billion, one of the biggest acquisitions in business history. Disney now generates 31 percent of its income from broadcasting, 23 percent from theme parks, and the balance from "creative content," meaning films, publishing and merchandising. The ABC deal provided Disney, already regarded as the industry leader at using cross-selling and cross- promotion to maximize revenues, with a U.S. broadcasting network and widespread global media holdings to incorporate into its activities. Consequently, according to Advertising Age (8/7/95), Disney "is uniquely positioned to fulfill virtually any marketing option, on any scale, almost anywhere in the world." It has already included the new Capital Cities/ABC brands in its exclusive global marketing deals with McDonald's and Mattel toymakers. Although Disney has traditionally preferred to operate on its own, C.E.O. Michael Eisner has announced Disney's plans to expand aggressively overseas through joint ventures with local firms or other global players, or through further acquisitions. Disney's stated goal is to expand its non-U.S. share of revenues from 23 percent in 1995 to 50 percent by 2000. Historically, Disney has been strong in entertainment and animation, two areas that do well in the global market. In 1996 Disney reorganized, putting all its global television activities into a single division, Disney/ABC International Television. Its first order of business is to expand the children- and family-oriented Disney Channel into a global force, capitalizing upon the enormous Disney resources. Disney is also developing an advertising-supported children's channel to complement the subscription Disney Channel. For the most part, Disney's success has been restricted to English-language channels in North
  • 6. America, Britain and Australia. Disney's absence has permitted the children's channels of News Corporation, Time Warner and especially Viacom to dominate the lucrative global market. Disney launched a Chinese-language Disney Channel based in Taiwan in 1995, and plans to launch Disney Channels in France, Italy, Germany and the Middle East. "The Disney Channel should be the killer children's service throughout the world," Disney's executive in charge of international television states. With the purchase of ABC's ESPN, the television sports network, Disney has possession of the unquestioned global leader. ESPN has three U.S. cable channels, a radio network with 420 affiliates, and the ESPN Sports-Zone website, one of the most heavily used locales on the Internet. One Disney executive notes that with ESPN and the family-oriented Disney Channel, Disney has "two horses to ride in foreign markets, not just one." ESPN International dominates televised sport, broadcasting on a 24-hour basis in 21 languages to over 165 countries. It reaches the one desirable audience that had eluded Disney in the past: young, single, middle-class men. "Our plan is to think globally but to customize locally," states the senior VP of ESPN International. In Latin America the emphasis is on soccer, in Asia it is table tennis, and in India ESPN provided over 1,000 hours of cricket in 1995. Disney plans to exploit the "synergies" of ESPN much as it has exploited its cartoon characters. "We know that when we lay Mickey Mouse or Goofy on top of products, we get pretty creative stuff," Eisner states. "ESPN has the potential to be that kind of brand." Disney plans call for a chain of ESPN theme sports bars, ESPN product merchandising, and possibly a chain of ESPN entertainment centers based on the Club ESPN at Walt Disney World. ESPN has released five music CDs, two of which have sold over 500,000 copies. In late 1996, Disney began negotiations with Hearst and Petersen Publishing to produce ESPNSports Weekly magazine, to be a "branded competitor to Sports Illustrated." Disney selected holdings ī‚ˇ The U.S. ABC television and radio networks; ī‚ˇ Ten U.S. television stations and 21 U.S. radio stations; ī‚ˇ U.S. and global cable television channels Disney Channel, ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNews; holdings in Lifetime, A & E and History channels; ī‚ˇ Americast, interactive TV joint venture with several telephone companies; ī‚ˇ Several major film, video and television production studios including Disney, Miramax and Buena Vista; ī‚ˇ Magazine and newspaper publishing, through its subsidiaries, Fairchild Publications and Chilton Publications; ī‚ˇ Book publishing, including Hyperion Books and Chilton Publications;
  • 7. ī‚ˇ Several music labels, including Hollywood Records, Mammoth Records and Walt Disney Records; ī‚ˇ Theme parks and resorts, including Disneyland, Disney World and stakes in major theme parks in France and Japan; ī‚ˇ Disney Cruise Line; ī‚ˇ DisneyQuest, a chain of high-tech arcade game stores; ī‚ˇ Controlling interests in the NHL Anaheim Mighty Ducks and major league baseball's Anaheim Angels; ī‚ˇ Consumer products, including more than 550 Disney retail stores worldwide. Bertelsmann $15 billion - 1996 sales Bertelsmann is the one European firm in the first tier of media giants. The Bertelsmann empire was built on global networks of book and music clubs. Music and television provide 31 percent of its income, book publishing 33 percent, magazines and newspapers 20 percent, and a global printing business accounts for the remainder. In 1994 its income was distributed among Germany (36 percent), the rest of Europe (32 percent), the United States (24 percent) and the rest of the world (8 percent). Bertelsmann's stated goal is to evolve "from a media enterprise with international activities into a truly global communications group." Bertelsmann's strengths in global expansion are its global distribution network for music, its global book and music clubs, and its facility with languages other than English. It is working to strengthen its music holdings to become the world leader, through a possible buyout of--or merger with--EMI and through establishing joint ventures with local music companies in emerging markets. Bertelsmann is considered to be the best contender of all the media giants to exploit the Eastern European markets. Bertelsmann has two severe competitive disadvantages in the global media sweepstakes. It has no significant film or television production studios or film library, and it has minimal involvement in global television, where much of the growth is taking place. The company began to address this problem in 1996 by merging its television interests (Ufa) into a joint venture with Compagnie Luxembourgeoise de Telediffusion (CLT), the Luxembourg-based European commercial
  • 8. broadcasting power. According to a Bertelsmann executive, the CLT deal was "a strategic step to become a major media player, especially in light of the recent European and American mergers." Bertelsmann selected holdings ī‚ˇ German television channels RTL, RTL2, SuperRTL and Vox; ī‚ˇ Part ownership of Premiere, Germany's largest pay-TV channel; ī‚ˇ Stakes in British, French and Dutch TV channels; ī‚ˇ 50 percent stake in CLT-Ufa, which owns 19 European TV channels and 23 European radio stations; ī‚ˇ Eighteen European radio stations; ī‚ˇ Newspaper and magazine publishing, including more than 100 magazines; ī‚ˇ Book publishing, with some 40 publishing houses, concentrating on German-, French- and English-language (Bantam and Doubleday Dell) titles; ī‚ˇ Major recording studios Arista and RCA; ī‚ˇ Leading book and record clubs in the world. Viacom $13 billion - 1997 sales C.E.O. Sumner Redstone, who controls 39 percent of Viacom's stock, orchestrated the deals that led to the acquisitions of Paramount and Blockbuster in 1994, thereby promoting the firm from $2 billion in 1993 sales to the front ranks. Viacom generates 33 percent of its income from its film studios, 33 percent from its music, video rentals and theme parks, 18 percent from broadcasting, and 14 percent from publishing. Redstone's strategy is for Viacom to become the world's "premier software driven growth company." Viacom's growth strategy is twofold. First, it is implementing an aggressive policy of using company-wide cross-promotions to improve sales. It proved invaluable that MTV constantly plugged the film
  • 9. Clueless in 1995, and the same strategy will be applied to the Paramount television program based on the movie. Simon & Schuster is establishing a Nickelodeon book imprint and a "Beavis and Butthead" book series based on the MTV characters. Viacom also has plans to establish a comic-book imprint based upon Paramount characters, it is considering creating a record label to exploit its MTV brand name and it has plans to open a chain of retail stores to capitalize upon its "brands" ^ la Disney and Time Warner. In 1997 Paramount will begin producing three Nickelodeon and three MTV movies annually. "We're just now beginning to realize the benefits of the Paramount and Blockbuster mergers," Redstone stated in 1996. Second, Viacom has targeted global growth, with a stated goal of earning 40 percent of its revenues outside of the United States by 2000. As one Wall Street analyst puts it, Redstone wants Viacom "playing in the same international league" with News Corporation and Time Warner. Since 1992 Viacom has invested between $750 million and $1 billion in international expansion. "We're not taking our foot off the accelerator," one Viacom executive states. Viacom's two main weapons are Nickelodeon and MTV. Nickelodeon has been a global powerhouse, expanding to every continent but Antarctica in 1996 and 1997 and offering programming in several languages. It is already a world leader in children's television, reaching 90 million TV households in 70 countries other than the United States--where it can be seen in 68 million households and completely dominates children's television. MTV is the preeminent global music television channel, available in 250 million homes worldwide and in scores of nations. In 1996 Viacom announced further plans to "significantly expand" its global operations. MTV has used new digital technologies to make it possible to customize programming inexpensively for different regions and nations around the world. Viacom selected holdings ī‚ˇ Thirteen U.S. television stations; ī‚ˇ A 50 percent interest in the U.S. UPN television network with Chris-Craft Industries; ī‚ˇ U.S. and global cable television networks, including MTV, M2, VH1, Nickelodeon, Showtime, TVLand and Paramount Networks;
  • 10. ī‚ˇ A 50 percent interest in Comedy Central channel (with Time Warner); ī‚ˇ Film, video and television production, including Paramount Pictures; ī‚ˇ 50 percent stake in United Cinemas International, one of the world's three largest theater companies; ī‚ˇ Blockbuster Video and Music stores, the world's largest video rental stores; ī‚ˇ Book publishing, including Simon & Schuster, Scribners and Macmillan; ī‚ˇ Five theme parks. News Corporation $10 billion - 1996 sales The News Corporation is often identified with its head, Rupert Murdoch, whose family controls some 30 percent of its stock. Murdoch's goal is for News Corporation to own multiple forms of programming--news, sports, films and children's shows--and beam them via satellite or TV stations to homes in the United States, Europe, Asia and South America. Viacom CEO Sumner Redstone says of Murdoch that "he basically wants to conquer the world." And he seems to be doing it. Redstone, Disney CEO Michael Eisner, and Time Warner CEO Gerald Levin have each commented that Murdoch is the one media executive they most respect and fear, and the one whose moves they study. TCI's John Malone states that global media vertical integration is all about trying to catch Rupert. Time Warner executive Ted Turner views Murdoch in a more sinister fashion, having likened him to Adolf Hitler. After establishing News Corporation in his native Australia, Murdoch entered the British market in the 1960s and by the 1980s had become a dominant force in the U.S. market. News Corporation went heavily into debt to subsidize its purchase of Twentieth Century Fox and the formation of the Fox television network in the 1980s; by the mid-1990s News Corporation had eliminated much of that debt. News Corporation operates in nine different media on six continents. Its 1995 revenues were distributed relatively evenly among filmed
  • 11. entertainment (26 percent), newspapers (24 percent), television (21 percent), magazines (14 percent) and book publishing (12 percent). News Corporation has been masterful in utilizing its various properties for cross-promotional purposes, and at using its media power to curry influence with public officials worldwide. "Murdoch seems to have Washington in his back pocket," observed one industry analyst after News Corporation received another favorable ruling (New York Times, 7/26/96). The only media sector in which News Corporation lacks a major presence is music, but it has a half-interest in the Channel V music television channel in Asia. Although News Corporation earned 70 percent of its 1995 income in the United States, its plan for global expansion looks to continental Europe, Asia and Latin America, areas where growth is expected to be greatest for commercial media. Until around 2005, Murdoch expects the surest profits in the developed world, especially Europe and Japan. News Corporation is putting most of its eggs in the basket of television, specifically digital satellite television. It plans to draw on its experience in establishing the most profitable satellite television system in the world, the booming British Sky Broadcasting (BSkyB). News Corporation can also use its U.S. Fox television network to provide programming for its nascent satellite ventures. News Corporation is spending billions of dollars to establish these systems around the world; although the risk is considerable, if only a few of them establish monopoly or duopoly positions the entire project should prove lucrative. News Corporation selected holdings ī‚ˇ The U.S. Fox broadcasting network; ī‚ˇ Twenty-two U.S. television stations, the largest U.S. station group, covering over 40 percent of U.S. TV households; ī‚ˇ Fox News Channel; ī‚ˇ A 50 percent stake (with TCI's Liberty Media) in several U.S. and global cable networks, including fx, fxM and Fox Sports Net; ī‚ˇ 50 percent stake in Fox Kids Worldwide, production studio and owner of U.S. cable Family Channel; ī‚ˇ Ownership or major interests in satellite services reaching Europe, U.S., Asia, and Latin America, often under the Sky Broadcasting brand;
  • 12. ī‚ˇ Twentieth Century Fox, a major film, television and video production center, which has a library of over 2,000 films to exploit; ī‚ˇ Some 132 newspapers (primarily in Australia, Britain and the United States, including the London Times and the New York Post), making it one of the three largest newspaper groups in the world; ī‚ˇ Twenty-five magazines, most notably TV Guide; ī‚ˇ Book publishing interests, including HarperCollins; ī‚ˇ Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team. Sony $9 billion - 1997 sales (media only) Sony's media holdings are concentrated in music (the former CBS records) and film and television production (the former Columbia Pictures), each of which it purchased in 1989. Music accounts for about 60 percent of Sony's media income and film and television production account for the rest. Sony is a dominant entertainment producer, and its media sales are expected to surpass $9 billion in 1997. It also has major holdings in movie theaters in joint venture with Seagram. As Sony's media activities seem divorced from its other extensive activities--Sony expects $50 billion in company-wide sales in 1997--there is ongoing speculation that it will sell its valuable production studios to vertically integrated chains that can better exploit them. Sony was foiled in its initial attempts to find synergies between hardware and software, but it anticipates that digital communication will provide the basis for new synergies. Sony hopes to capitalize upon its vast copyrighted library of films, music and TV programs to leap to the front of the digital video disc market, where it is poised to be one of the two global leaders with Matsushita. Sony also enjoys a 25 percent share of the multi-billion-dollar video games industry; with the shift to digital formats these games can now be converted into channels in digital television systems. TCI $7 billion - 1996 sales
  • 13. TCI (Tele-Communications Inc.) is smaller than the other firms in the first tier, but its unique position in the media industry has made it a central player in the global media system. TCI's foundation is its dominant position as the second biggest U.S. cable television system provider. C.E.O. John Malone, who has effective controlling interest over TCI, has been able to use the steady cash influx from the lucrative semi-monopolistic cable business to build an empire. Malone understands the importance of the U.S. cable base to bankroll TCI's expansion; in 1995 and 1996 he bought several smaller cable systems to consolidate TCI's hold on the U.S. cable market. TCI faces a direct and potentially very damaging challenge to its U.S. market share from digital satellite broadcasting. It is responding by converting its cable systems to digital format so as to increase channel capacity to 200. TCI is also using its satellite spin-off to position itself in the rival satellite business and retain some of the 15 to 20 million Americans expected to switch from cable broadcasting to satellite broadcasting by 2000. In addition to owning two satellites valued at $600 million, TCI holds a 21 percent stake in Primestar, a U.S. satellite television joint venture with the other leading U.S. cable companies, News Corporation and General Electric, which already had 1.2 million subscribers in l996. TCI has used its control of cable systems to acquire equity stakes in many of the cable channels that need to be carried over TCI to be viable. TCI has significant interests in Discovery, QVC, Fox Sports Net, Court TV, E!, Home Shopping Network and Black Entertainment TV, among others. In 1996, TCI negotiated the right to purchase a 20 percent stake in News Corporation's new Fox News Channel in return for access to TCI systems. Through its subsidiary Liberty Media, TCI has interests in 91 U.S. program services. Nor does TCI restrict its investments to cable channels and content producers. It has a 10 percent stake in Time Warner as well as a 20 percent stake in Silver King Communications, where former Fox network builder Barry Diller is putting together another U.S. television network. TCI has applied its expansionist strategy to the global as well as domestic media market. On the one hand, TCI develops its core cable business and has become the global leader in cable systems, with strong units in Britain, Japan and Chile. Merrill Lynch estimates that TCI International's cable base outside of the United States will increase from 3 million subscribers in 1995 to 10 million in 1999.
  • 14. On the other hand, TCI uses its cable resources to invest across all global media and to engage in numerous non-cable joint ventures. "When you are the largest cable operator in the world," a TCI executive states, "people find a way to do business with you." It already has 30 media deals outside of the United States, including a venture with Sega Enterprises to launch computer game channels, a joint venture with News Corporation for a global sports channel, and a 10 percent stake in Sky Latin America. Universal (Seagram) $7 billion - 1997 sales Effectively controlled by the Bronfman family, the global beverage firm Seagram purchased Universal (then MCA) from Matsushita for $5.7 billion in 1995. Matsushita was unable to make a success of MCA and had refused to go along with MCA executives who had wanted to acquire CBS in the early l990s. Universal is expected to account for approximately half of Seagram's $14 billion in sales in 1997. Over half of Universal's income is generated by the Universal Studios' production of films and television programs. Universal is also a major music producer and book publisher and operates several theme parks. As many of the broadcast networks and cable channels vertically integrate with production companies, Universal has fewer options for sales and is less secure in its future. It owns the cable USA Network and the Sci-Fi Network, after buying out its uneasy partner Viacom. NBC (GE) $5 billion - 1996 sales General Electric is one of the leading electronics and manufacturing firms in the world with nearly $80 billion in sales in 1996. Its operations have become increasingly global, with non-U.S. revenues increasing from 20 percent of the total in 1985 to 38 percent in 1995, and an expected 50 percent in 2000. Although NBC currently constitutes only a small portion of GE's total activity, after years of rapid growth it is considered to be the core of GE's strategy for long-term global growth.
  • 15. NBC owns U.S. television and radio networks and 11 television stations. It has been aggressive in expanding into cable, where it now owns several cable channels outright, like CNBC, as well as shares in some 20 other channels, including the A&E network. The most dramatic expression of GE's media-centered strategy is its 1996 alliance and joint investment with Microsoft to produce the cable news channel MSNBC, along with a complementary on-line service. From this initial $500 million investment, NBC and Microsoft plan to expand MSNBC quickly into a global news channel, followed perhaps by a global entertainment and sports channel. NBC and Microsoft are also developing a series of TV channels in Europe aimed at computer users. The Second Tier Below the global giants in the media food chain is a second tier of corporations that fill regional or niche markets. Some of these firms are as large as the smaller global companies, but lack their world-wide reach. A few second-tier companies may attempt, through aggressive mergers and acquisitions of like-sized firms, to become full-blown first-tier global media giants; others will likely be swallowed by larger companies amassing ever greater empires. U.S. ī‚ˇ Westinghouse $5 billion ī‚ˇ Advance Publications $4.9 billion ī‚ˇ Gannett $4.0 billion ī‚ˇ Cox Enterprises $3.8 billion ī‚ˇ Times-Mirror $3.5 billion ī‚ˇ Comcast $3.4 billion ī‚ˇ McGraw Hill $3 billion ī‚ˇ Reader's Digest $3 billion ī‚ˇ Knight-Ridder $2.9 billion ī‚ˇ Dow Jones $2.5 billion ī‚ˇ New York Times Co. $2.5 billion ī‚ˇ Tribune Co. $2.2 billion ī‚ˇ Hearst $2 billion ī‚ˇ Washington Post Co. $1.8 billion ī‚ˇ Cablevision $1.1 billion ī‚ˇ DirecTV (Owned by General Motors) ī‚ˇ DreamWorks Canada ī‚ˇ Thomson $7.3 billion
  • 16. ī‚ˇ Rogers Communications $2 billion ī‚ˇ Hollinger Latin America ī‚ˇ Cisneros Group (Venezuela) $3.2 billion ī‚ˇ Globo (Brazil) $2.2 billion ī‚ˇ Clarin (Argentina) $1.2 billion ī‚ˇ Televisa (Mexico) $1.2 billion Europe ī‚ˇ Havas (France) $8.8 billion ī‚ˇ Reed Elsevier (Britain/Netherlands) $5.5 billion ī‚ˇ EMI (Britain) $5.4 billion ī‚ˇ Hachette (France) $5.3 billion ī‚ˇ Reuters (Britain) $4.1 billion ī‚ˇ Kirch Group (Germany) $4 billion ī‚ˇ Granada Group (Britain) $3.6 billion ī‚ˇ BBC (Britain) $3.5 billion ī‚ˇ Axel Springer (Germany) $3 billion ī‚ˇ Canal Plus (France) $3 billion ī‚ˇ CLT (Luxembourg) $3 billion ī‚ˇ Pearson PLC (Britain) $2.9 billion ī‚ˇ United News & Media (Britain) $2.9 billion ī‚ˇ Carlton Communications (Britain) $2.5 billion ī‚ˇ Mediaset (Italy) $2 billion ī‚ˇ Kinnevik (Sweden) $1.8 billion ī‚ˇ Television Francais 1 (France) $1.8 billion ī‚ˇ Verlagsgruppe Bauer (Germany) $1.7 billion ī‚ˇ Wolters Kluwer (Netherlands) $1.7 billion ī‚ˇ RCS Editori Spa (Italy) $1.6 billion ī‚ˇ VNU (Netherlands) $1.4 billion ī‚ˇ Prisa Group (Spain) ī‚ˇ Antena 3 (Spain) ī‚ˇ CEP Communications (France) Asia/Pacific ī‚ˇ NHK (Japan) $5.6 billion ī‚ˇ Fuji Television (Japan) $2.6 billion ī‚ˇ Nippon Television Network (Japan) $2.2 billion ī‚ˇ Cheil Jedang (Korea) $2.1 billion ī‚ˇ Tokyo Broadcasting System (Japan) $2.1 billion
  • 17. ī‚ˇ Modi (India) $2 billion ī‚ˇ Asahi National Broadcasting Co. (Japan) $1.6 billion ī‚ˇ Toho Company (Japan) $1.6 billion ī‚ˇ PBL (Australia) $750 million ī‚ˇ TVB International (China) ī‚ˇ Chinese Entertainment Television (China) ī‚ˇ Asia Broadcasting and Communica-tions Network (Thailand) ī‚ˇ ABS-CBN (Philippines) ī‚ˇ Doordarshan (India) ī‚ˇ Chinese Central Television (China) *Most sales figures are for 1996, but some are as early as 1993. See FAIR's Archives for more on: New York Times Murdoch/Wall Street Journal Washington Post Gannett/USA Today AT&T/John Malone Knight-Ridder Internet Media Tribune Company CBS Time Warner GE Disney Murdoch Corporate Ownership